0000000000927173

AUTHOR

Adam Powell

showing 7 related works from this author

2000 years of parallel societies in Stone Age Central Europe.

2013

Farming or Fishing Evidence has been mounting that most modern European populations originated from the immigration of farmers who displaced the hunter-gatherers of the Mesolithic. Bollongino et al. (p. 479 , published online 10 October) present analyses of palaeogenetic and isotopic data from Neolithic human skeletons from the Blätterhöhle burial site in Germany. The analyses identify a Neolithic freshwater fish–eating hunter-gatherer group, living contemporaneously and in close proximity to a Neolithic farming group. While there is some evidence that hunter-gatherer women may have admixed into the farming population, it appears likely that marriage or cultural boundaries between the group…

ForagingMolecular Sequence DataBiologyDNA MitochondrialStone AgeEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsHumans0601 history and archaeologyBase sequenceMesolithicHistory Ancient030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinary060102 archaeologyBase SequenceEcologybusiness.industryAgriculture06 humanities and the artsAnimal FeedEuropeAgricultureAnimals DomesticAnthropologybusinessScience (New York, N.Y.)
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Evolution of lactase persistence: an example of human niche construction

2011

Niche construction is the process by which organisms construct important components of their local environment in ways that introduce novel selection pressures. Lactase persistence is one of the clearest examples of niche construction in humans. Lactase is the enzyme responsible for the digestion of the milk sugar lactose and its production decreases after the weaning phase in most mammals, including most humans. Some humans, however, continue to produce lactase throughout adulthood, a trait known as lactase persistence. In European populations, a single mutation (−13910*T) explains the distribution of the phenotype, whereas several mutations are associated with it in Africa and the Middle …

Adult0106 biological sciencesAsiaNatural selectionmedicine.medical_treatmentLactoseBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesGene FrequencyLactase persistencemedicineAnimalsHumansComputer SimulationNeolithicAlleleDomesticationLactaseddc:599.9030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerGenetics0303 health sciencesGenetic VariationLactaseArticlesBiological EvolutionEuropeDomestic animalsDairyingLactase persistenceNiche constructionGenetics PopulationMilkAfricaTraitLocal environmentCattleNiche constructionGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSingle mutationPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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Inferring Learning Strategies from Cultural Frequency Data

2015

Social learning has been identified as one of the fundamentals of culture and therefore the understanding of why and how individuals use social information presents one of the big questions in cultural evolution. To date much of the theoretical work on social learning has been done in isolation of data. Evolutionary models often provide important insight into which social learning strategies are expected to have evolved but cannot tell us which strategies human populations actually use. In this chapter we explore how much information about the underlying learning strategies can be extracted by analysing the temporal occurrence or usage patterns of different cultural variants in a population…

education.field_of_studyComputer sciencebusiness.industryPopulationBayesian probabilityInferenceSocial learningMachine learningcomputer.software_genreData scienceCultural analysisArtificial intelligenceApproximate Bayesian computationeducationbusinessSociocultural evolutioncomputerGenerative grammar
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Modern taurine cattle descended from small number of near-eastern founders.

2012

Archaeozoological and genetic data indicate that taurine cattle were first domesticated from local wild ox (aurochs) in the Near East some 10,500 years ago. However, while modern mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation indicates early Holocene founding event(s), a lack of ancient DNA data from the region of origin, variation in mutation rate estimates, and limited application of appropriate inference methodologies have resulted in uncertainty on the number of animals first domesticated. A large number would be expected if cattle domestication was a technologically straightforward and unexacting region-wide phenomenon, while a smaller number would be consistent with a more complex and challengin…

GeneticsMitochondrial DNAModels Geneticved/biologySmall numberTaurine cattleved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesPopulation DynamicsBiologyAurochsbiology.organism_classificationDNA MitochondrialFounder EffectAncient DNAMutation RateEvolutionary biologyGeneticsAnimalsCattleFemaleApproximate Bayesian computationDomesticationMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFounder effectMolecular biology and evolution
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The genetic prehistory of domesticated cattle from their origin to the spread across Europe

2015

Background Cattle domestication started in the 9th millennium BC in Southwest Asia. Domesticated cattle were then introduced into Europe during the Neolithic transition. However, the scarcity of palaeogenetic data from the first European domesticated cattle still inhibits the accurate reconstruction of their early demography. In this study, mitochondrial DNA from 193 ancient and 597 modern domesticated cattle (Bos taurus) from sites across Europe, Western Anatolia and Iran were analysed to provide insight into the Neolithic dispersal process and the role of the local European aurochs population during cattle domestication. Results Using descriptive summary statistics and serial coalescent s…

GeneticsGenetics(clinical)570 Biowissenschaften570 Life sciences
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The Origins of Lactase Persistence in Europe

2009

Lactase persistence (LP) is common among people of European ancestry, but with the exception of some African, Middle Eastern and southern Asian groups, is rare or absent elsewhere in the world. Lactase gene haplotype conservation around a polymorphism strongly associated with LP in Europeans (−13,910 C/T) indicates that the derived allele is recent in origin and has been subject to strong positive selection. Furthermore, ancient DNA work has shown that the −13,910*T (derived) allele was very rare or absent in early Neolithic central Europeans. It is unlikely that LP would provide a selective advantage without a supply of fresh milk, and this has lead to a gene-culture coevolutionary model w…

Genetic MarkersOld WorldQH301-705.5medicine.medical_treatmentLactoseBiologyComputational Biology/Molecular GeneticsEvolution MolecularCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceGene FrequencyGeneticsmedicineHumansComputer SimulationVitamin DBiology (General)AlleleMolecular BiologyAllele frequencyAllelesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNutritionLactaseGeneticsLactose intolerancePolymorphism GeneticNatural selectionEvolutionary Biology/Evolutionary and Comparative GeneticsGeographyEcologyComputational BiologyBayes TheoremLactasemedicine.diseaseComputational Biology/Evolutionary ModelingDietEvolutionary Biology/Human EvolutionEuropeLactase persistenceAncient DNAHaplotypesComputational Theory and MathematicsEvolutionary biologyModeling and SimulationResearch ArticlePLoS Computational Biology
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Ancestry and demography and descendants of Iron Age nomads of the Eurasian Steppe

2017

During the 1st millennium before the Common Era (BCE), nomadic tribes associated with the Iron Age Scythian culture spread over the Eurasian Steppe, covering a territory of more than 3,500 km in breadth. To understand the demographic processes behind the spread of the Scythian culture, we analysed genomic data from eight individuals and a mitochondrial dataset of 96 individuals originating in eastern and western parts of the Eurasian Steppe. Genomic inference reveals that Scythians in the east and the west of the steppe zone can best be described as a mixture of Yamnaya-related ancestry and an East Asian component. Demographic modelling suggests independent origins for eastern and western g…

Gene FlowMale0301 basic medicineSteppePopulation geneticsHuman MigrationGenomic dataBiological anthropologyScience[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropologyDatasets as TopicGeneral Physics and AstronomyDNA MitochondrialWhite PeopleArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyRussia03 medical and health sciencesAsian Peopleddc:590HumansEast AsiaHistory AncientTransients and MigrantsModels StatisticalMultidisciplinarygeography.geographical_feature_categoryHuman migrationbusiness.industryQGenetic VariationGeneral ChemistryGrasslandKazakhstan030104 developmental biologyGeographyIron AgeEthnologybusiness
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